CINEMATIC REVELATIONS allows me the luxury of writing, editing and archiving my film and television reviews. Some reviews appeared initially in "The Commercial Dispatch" and "The Planet Weekly" and then later in the comment archives at the Internet Movie Database. IMDB.COM, however, imposes a limit on both the number of words and the number of times that an author may revise their comments. I hope that anybody who peruses these expanded reviews will find them useful.

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Sunday, June 4, 2017

FILM REVIEW OF ''GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, VOL. 2" (2017)

“Super” writer/director James Gunn took moviegoers for an
irreverent, interplanetary joyride, peppered with pop culture references, in “Guardians
of the Galaxy” back in 2014. Happily,
Gunn’s sequel “Guardians of the Galaxy, Volume 2” (**** OUT OF ****) qualifies
as just as impressive with several surprises.
If you haven’t seen “GoTG, Vol. 1,” then you may have problems putting
both the swashbuckling characters and their outlandish backstory into context
in this imaginative, science-fiction, follow-up saga. Good sequels always dig deeper into the original
characters and conjure up newcomers. “GoTG, Vol. 2” reassembles the same
quintet and scrutinizes them in greater detail.
Peter Quill, ostensibly the Guardians’ leader, catches up with his enigmatic
sire, Ego, and father and son surprise each other with their goals during the second
act. We learn that Ego has been searching
the universe for his long, lost son. Later,
Yondu observes astutely about the grandiose Ego: “He may have been your father,
Quill, but he wasn't your daddy.” This
father and son connection yields the ultimate surprise, too, but discretion
prevents me from divulging specifics. The
peculiar relationship that Quill has forged with Yondu Udonta, the extraterrestrial
space pirate who abducted Quill from Earth after the lad fled from the hospital
where his cancer-stricken mom died takes on an added dimension. No character changes as much in “GoTG 2” as Yondu. He evolves from a lowlife villain to an
individual of integrity. Meanwhile, sibling rivalry keeps Quill’s quasi-girlfriend
Gamora locked into a never-ending feud with her jealous sister Nebula. Nebula hates Gamora with a passion because
their evil stepfather Thanos preferred Gamora over her. Smutty-mouthed Rocket Raccoon remains as
obnoxious as ever, but his bad-tempered attitude thaws during the third
act. Good sequels send off the
characters onto exciting new adventures against different villains. The Guardians are summoned to a remote corner
of the cosmos again. The new aliens—the Sovereigns—constitute
a petulant people with little sense of humor. When the Rocket infuriates them, the latter pursue
the Guardians with a vengeance until greater powers interfere.

The last time we saw the Guardians, the Nova Corps had cleared
them of all crimes and provided them with a refurnished version of his spaceship
"The Milano.” The arboreal,
sentient-like, extraterrestrial Groot (Vin Diesel’s voice) had sacrificed
himself to save his companions, but Rocket Raccoon scourged up a surviving twig
and has planted it. As “GoTG, Vol. 2,”
unfolds, an arrogant race of gilded humanoids known as the Sovereigns have
employed our motley crew to protect their priceless batteries from an enormous but
absurd-looking trout with thrashing tentacles and thousands of thorny teeth. During this hilarious opening credits gambit,
the roguish Star-Lord (Chris Pratt of “The Magnificent Seven”), green-skinned
Amazon Gamora (Zoe Saldana of “Colombiana”), blue-skinned hulk Drax (Dave
Bautista of “Spectre”), and pugnacious Rocket Raccoon (Bradley Cooper’s voice)
tangle with this cartoonish Cthulhu-thing atop a lofty platform that resembles
an electric razor where the batteries are housed. During this far-fetched fracas, Baby Groot
dances to a tune from Star-Lord’s mix tape—ELO’s “Blue Sky”--oblivious to any
peril the goofy trout-squid poses while the Guardians struggle to defeat their
nemesis. The scene is clever because
Gunn choreographs this blockbuster action scene with Baby Groot in the
foreground rather than the contentious Guardians! Afterward, the grateful Sovereigns reward our
heroes with nothing less than Gamora’s deceitful sister Nebula. No sooner have our heroes proven their nerve to
the Sovereigns than they find themselves in trouble with them. The contemptuous Rocket has taken it upon
himself steal some of those valuable batteries.
The incensed Sovereigns deployed a drone fleet to annihilate the
Guardians. Conveniently, Peter Quill’s
biological father Ego (Kurt Russell of “The Hateful 8") intervenes and saves
them from the Sovereigns. Ego invites Quill,
Gamora, and Drax to accompany him to his planet, while Rocket, Baby Groot, and
Nebula stay behind to repair their crashed spacecraft.

Meantime, the haughty Sovereign Queen Ayesha (Elizabeth
Debicki of “The Great Gatsby”) hires arrow-whistling Ravager chieftain Yondu Udonta
(Michael Rooker of “The Belk Experiment”) to track down the Guardians. What Yondu doesn’t realize is a perfidious faction
within his gang of smugglers has been plotting mutiny. Yondu’s grotesque lieutenant, Taserface (Chris
Sullivan of “Imperium”), heads this uprising.
After they catch up with Rocket, Baby Groot, Nebula, the insubordinate Ravagers
turn on Yondu and lock him up with Rocket.
Nevertheless, Yondu and Rocket aren’t idle behind bars for long because Baby
Groot helps them to escape. Mind you,
Yondu was already up to his ears in trouble with the rest of the Ravagers and
their commander, Stakar Ogord (Sylvester Stallone of “Rocky”), who turned
against him for kidnapping Peter Quill in the first place. If you saw the original “G0TG,” you know Star-Lord
tricked Yondu when he relinquished the Orb.
The wily Star-Lord replaced the Infinity Stone that had been in the Orb
with a grinning troll doll. Yondu had
payback in mind when he sold his services to the Sovereigns, but then everything
went sideways for him. Nevertheless,
once Rocket, Baby Groot, and he escape, they eliminate their adversaries.

The major revelation of the “Guardians” sequel concerns the
character of Ego. Kurt Russel looks like
he had a blast playing this imperious Celestial being who is a manifestation of
a psychedelic planet that Ego created for himself. Basically, he is an amoral deity who behaves
like the Greek god Zeus. During their
brief stint on the planet, Peter and Ego begin on friendly terms until Ego
slips up and reveals something terrible that alienates Peter. With its sumptuous CGI of alien galaxies and
landscapes, “GoTG, Vol. 2” looks a hundred times better visually than its
predecessor. If you enjoyed the greatest hits music in the original film, the
sequel serves up even more memorable pop tunes and incorporates them into the
psychology of the plot, too! As the
fifteenth entry in the Marvel Comics Cinematic Universe, the tongue-in-cheek “Guardians
of the Galaxy, Volume 2” ranks as one of the best.